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#1
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"David Eduardo" wrote: "Telamon" wrote in message ... In article , "David Eduardo" wrote: "Telamon" wrote in message . .. I think he believes his own noise and no he can't provide the link because what he claims doesn't exist. At least not yet. The info provided to iBiquity's owners is not public, so I am not giving you a link. You will simply have to hold your water until Samsung ships low power, lower cost chips in 2008. You are full of it. The development was announced and then news about it went to zero. That's not a good sign. We are aware of what is going on. That's all that matters; the idea is to keep expanding the station count so more and more manufacturers will buy the new chips and get the radios out in the stores. Most lies have a kernel of truth in them so they are believable. All I know is every time a take a poke at what he posts the stick goes right through the one layer of the "story" he tells. All that he posts seem very illusionary in nature. Nothing is like your insistence that listeners will put up with a bad AM signal and listen, despite radio audience measurements that are universally accepted showing no such thing occurs. This shows you are a sham. You don't know what reception is like around here AM or FM. You are full of it. How does the fact that listeners measured by the ratings services show no interest in skywave reception at all related to whether I know what reception is like of not? They DON'T listen to distant signals, so there is no need to protect distant signals. The point you do not understand since you do not live around here is AM does better day or night than FM. Even the low rolling hills on the coast let alone the larger mountains inland make for very poor FM reception so your arguments that FM sounds better is bogus. AM is superior over FM around here at least. I'll bet you have never driven route 1 along the coast in Ventura or LA counties. FM really sucks on that road that runs along the ocean. -- Telamon Ventura, California |
#2
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![]() "Telamon" wrote in message ... The point you do not understand since you do not live around here is AM does better day or night than FM. Even the low rolling hills on the coast let alone the larger mountains inland make for very poor FM reception so your arguments that FM sounds better is bogus. AM is superior over FM around here at least. I'll bet you have never driven route 1 along the coast in Ventura or LA counties. FM really sucks on that road that runs along the ocean. I have only driven that route a few dozen times. The local FMs (the ones with decent in market signals) sound fine. There are spots where there is multipath, but HD will reduce or eliminate that. |
#3
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In article ,
"David Eduardo" wrote: "Telamon" wrote in message ... The point you do not understand since you do not live around here is AM does better day or night than FM. Even the low rolling hills on the coast let alone the larger mountains inland make for very poor FM reception so your arguments that FM sounds better is bogus. AM is superior over FM around here at least. I'll bet you have never driven route 1 along the coast in Ventura or LA counties. FM really sucks on that road that runs along the ocean. I have only driven that route a few dozen times. The local FMs (the ones with decent in market signals) sound fine. There are spots where there is multipath, but HD will reduce or eliminate that. Try driving it again. Ocean on one side and high cliffs on the other such that FM is pretty much dead. You will not pick up anything from the LA area just a few stations from up or down the coast. Must be a magic radio in your car or you have never driven that road. Every post you make, makes you look less real to me. -- Telamon Ventura, California |
#4
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![]() "Telamon" wrote in message ... Try driving it again. Ocean on one side and high cliffs on the other such that FM is pretty much dead. You will not pick up anything from the LA area just a few stations from up or down the coast. The LA stations are not licensed to serve the coast up above Ventura County.... that is waaaaaaaaaaaaay outside their protected contour, and what is supposed to be heard are the local stations in each place. Must be a magic radio in your car or you have never driven that road. Every post you make, makes you look less real to me. I certainly have never been fool enough to try to hear LA stations up towards Santa Barbara. The former KRUZ, now KVYB, has a great signal along there from around Camarillo up to SLo, for example. In fact, that station gets good ratings in 5 different markets, from Oxnard to Santa Barbara to SLO to Santa Maria and Bakersfield. |
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